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tv   DW News  Deutsche Welle  November 4, 2019 6:30pm-6:46pm CET

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it's all happening. with. your link to from africa and the world. your link to exemption stories and discussions continue and welcome to news stream program tonight from funny germany . easy ally with safety deputed comes to africa join us on facebook t w africa. and. africa coming up on the program many young africans live in the country we'll find out how a town in guinea is dealing with the effects of migration and what makes people want to leave also coming up. when you drink in south africa infuses gin with the funds for unique pieces of africa.
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and you are welcome to the program migration across africa is a controversial topic some seed leaving the country as the only way to get a job and get ahead and the benefit to the sense from those living abroad are worth more than that continents and official development assistance but that assistance to go can also leave empty of the very people that are needed to create opportunities that home the educated and the ambitious will talk more in a moment about tackling this style m. about fast let's see how one town in guinea is affected by migration. it's the rainy season in guinea a money sucker pits like this one responding club olympique to mahmoud can be had in the bones but for most of the players here the game is
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a welcome diversion from gloomy daily life there are a few jobs and few opportunities many want to go somewhere else it's getting harder and harder for the coach to put a team together since so many players leave. those i don't think go find jobs in europe in germany france spain italy they want to realize their dream and help their families here on the are they able to. do what. many more needs to them we are there's no work my dream is to go away and earn money someplace else there's no support in this country i'll definitely leave. they feel especially ignored by the government many families in memore are affected by immigration they tell us peaches of capsized boat drowned young people a much more than just news items. family was he turned his oldest son died last year on the mediterranean his mother is consumed by grief. you know
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my heart has not been at peace since he died. with disabled he manages to make ends meet by repairing t.v.'s he says the loss of his son not only brings pain it also endangers the family's long term survival a few weeks ago his 2nd youngest son only 14 years old also left. a son has gone is killing me it's my biggest problem i don't want to lose him like the 1st one. left because they had few opportunities. the e.u. hopes to find the root causes of migration in guinea with about 100000000 euros from the emergency trust fund for africa and some of the money is also going to. return needs are being given a chance of
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a new beginning with financial aid and training like mamadou bussy who is learning basic founding skills he's coming to terms with his failed attempt to leave and he's frustrated to see on social media how others have made it to europe he wants to somehow get back on his feet. i heard this project will help me succeed i pray to god but if it doesn't work things will be very difficult for me but i know that is it. that mammals bus station the buses are actually are the field cars many young men stand off from here or stop here on their way north they tell us that because the drivers are supposed to report them the migrants switch to motorcycles. who everybody tending to leave guinea will probably find a way. joining me now is sudanese born entrepreneur mori brahim who is currently in berlin for the conference about migration from an african perspective. many thanks for your time we've just seen the reports where many in
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a town in guinea how they left or are planning to leave why is this happening across many countries in africa. asia is about i spray shop if you have young people who are. educated remove a bit of a life and you need a job and there's no job available there's no hope. then to decide to make it this is just a note that that is the human history over the last thousands of years you know the people whose whole song we have. the right to find there's somewhere else so what needs to be done there. i think what we need to be done. there's a number of things i mean in the african countries saeed's we didn't need to be attention authority and people we need investment to create jobs because job so not
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because it is by government jobs will be created by investment we need to have the right. framework for investment that only come with good governance that's what our foundation is focused on the issue of good governance good governance meaning he did need to focus in the liver awards in didn't what or what is needed we need to upgrade our education system because as it is at the moment is not fit for better bush we need more technical schools we need to create says skills which are needed by the current. economy what does the economy needs that we need to do is that ok so we talk about good governance but what happens if governments fail be our own people. it's it is it is really said. what happens in many areas is you kind of was evolution like what having that so that
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my own country. and rightly so or if i didn't see be able to voting with their feet you know if they don't have a new bush unity to change governments through the ballot box or through this quick . then they take the difficult to get across a hostile or across the mediterranean nobody wants those young people to be to be lost you know in the mediterranean or and. we're really in africa we need to be active. by the way most of the african make the asian or african migrants estate in africa actually they don't come from the little with over 70 percent of the migrants. migrating intensity inside africa and that's as far as there's a good. because we need to have really believe the free movement of people
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like what you have a new group of kids that held out accordingly is ok now you mentioned yourself your foundation move by him foundation also then you brought him prize now 12 years ago you found that that he brought him fries and 7 out of the 12 yes no african past has been found worthy enough to win it why how can we translate this. 22 points here. we have to leave standards we're not loading out of the stupid us if we're not every year. so we have to be true and credible secondly excellence is difficult i always say to me it will be our friends if this braise was offered to european leaders or the last 12 years could have been able to find little b.m.d. that every year with his prize you are leaving germany. to suggest that we
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would have names in europe who deserve the bridges over the last 12 years is difficult ok ok then time will not allow us to go on but many things. you're welcome thank you for having me now this animal here the elephants produces huge amounts of something that isn't quite so i gess take poop elephants dung is used for many things from federalizes to fuel but now is not often couple of sound in you use the ants using its engine to adi teached of africa correspondent adding reports. let them sleep is always good to see people's reactions while preparing is didn't a stick after all and love all is no ordinary gin it's flavored with elephant stuff
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. up. the yard is a little bit funny to think that was elephant dung but it's it's good surprisingly good something different that you didn't expect so you know. what makes me relax or feel better about it is all the alcohol that serialize us whatever that was inside the down side doesn't really make a big difference to me it tastes good. less and slee and his wife gather the special ingredient for their gin in south africa with the scope. and there's some danger involved pride of lions watch this with bated breath by. the 2 former academics came up with the idea while i was so far they're in business . terms of grass and leaves as lovely as those very botanical
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it's because the elephants they eat all the all this amazing food and they digest so little and the rest of their food is just passed through their digestive system very quickly and they end up on me on the field floor. indeed that doesn't smell to bet. still the pocket injures are just getting used to seeing people collect elephant feces. it's true for you a little bit with elected dog. yes yes. we collected about just over 3 of the size bags. and this will be. more we hope about. $4000.00 bottles 6 ounce bottles will have to get out of. the elephant feces get washed and dried the workshop
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then it gets steeped in gin for 24 hours just like a tieback find a product as a premium gin for more than 30 euros per bottle it's a clear success for the gin distillers. it's been crazy so it was it started off as maybe we could do this is a part time thing but we soon realized if we wanted to make it successful and if we if you wanted to grow the business and it had to be a full time job so forth for 2 of us it's a full time job. the spirit make us now i hope that the elephant dung infused will claim a permanent place on the shelves of south africa's stores and fox i. i personally do really like the taste and it seems a lot of people here are agreeing with me on that you just need to sort of not really think about what ingredient is in the. new south africa you can catch all our stories on our website on facebook page with some
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pictures of the kenyan awareness of the new york marathon album sun times for joining us. now to. cover your concept discomfort with the us. after 100 years as the ideals of the dot com more relevant today than they were.
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2 years ago missionaries reshaped. people understood design is a way of shaping society. about half a man does cassella. with a. it sounds out a part of. the park human kind. of 14. greetings from berlin and a warm welcome to our arts and culture news and at the top of a big week here in germany here's what's coming up on the show. looking to the 30th anniversary of the fall of the berlin wall later this week former east german civil rights activist tells us how she experienced the night of november 9th 1989.
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and the beethoven pastoral project inspired by his famous 6 symphony aims to have artists and gauge actively with today's urgent questions of environmental protection and climate change. but 1st the fallout of brecht's it whether it ultimately happens or not has been felt in the british capital for months now many companies with u.k. operations have announced plant and office closures and london itself is hard hit as banks and financial firms take precautionary measures with many shifting assets to the european mainland no wonder then that the art market has reacted in kind with many london galleries making their contingency plans and so far the winner on that front is paris. art dealer davids warner has 3 galleries in new york one in hong kong and one in london but with the u.k. set to leave the e.u.
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he's now opened this gallery in paris too with a show by raymond petit.

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